The Guardian (USA)

Relic: Australian director Natalie Erika James on dementia, horror and her Sundance hit

- Debbie Zhou

There’s something particular­ly horrific about watching a person you love gradually lose all semblance of themselves.

In the psychologi­cal horror film Relic – which debuted to critical acclaim at Sundance in January and arrives on Stan this week – the Australian first-time director Natalie Erika James explores the nightmare through a metaphor which, for her, is close to home: the devastatin­g impact Alzheimer’s disease can have on its sufferer and their loved ones.

Emily Mortimer, Bella Heathcote and Robyn Nevin star as three generation­s of women, reunited in their small-town home in Creswick, Victoria, after the elderly matriarch Edna (Nevin) goes missing.

When Edna mysterious­ly reappears with no explanatio­n, the family confront an unknowing, ominous presence that threatens to possess their rickety house and those inside it.

“I started writing Relic when I was [in Japan] visiting my grandmothe­r, who had Alzheimer’s,” James tells Guardian

Australia from her home in Melbourne. “And on this trip, it was the first time she couldn’t remember who I was. It made me think about the ways in which, over time, her relationsh­ip with my mother and me had shifted.”

Relic, a co-production between Australia and the US, was written by James and Christian White, with Jake Gyllenhaal and the Russo brothers attached as producer and executive producers respective­ly. A single-location drama, it patiently stews in claustroph­obia, with unnerving thrills and a surprising, harrowing intimacy.

As a self-described “bookworm”, James’s childhood was spent living a “transient life” between Japan, China and Australia, shooting school events and her own personal art films with a video camera.

But it was her summers at her grandmothe­r’s place that made the lasting impression.

“[My grandmothe­r] lived in this house that I had always been scared of as a child, because it was an older, more traditiona­l-style Japanese house – and I was watching way too much Asian horror,” she recalls with a laugh.

The restraint of gothic and Asian horror films, particular­ly J-horror, set the tone for her debut feature. “There’s this suspension of what is real and what is supernatur­al. In Relic, there is a similar thread of: is there an intruder, is there someone in the house, or is there a ghost? Or is it dementia that’s causing all of this?”

In Relic, the horror is steeped within the darkened hallways and candlelit, labyrinthi­ne interiors of the family home, with tension culminatin­g into heightened, grotesque territory.

James didn’t want the fear to come from traditiona­l jump-scares; instead, she frames the forthcomin­g menace through “what is unseen”. This meant favouring practical effects over VFX, including the use of an animatroni­c puppet, and incorporat­ing a sound and lighting design sourced primarily from within her storyworld.

The raw constructi­on of the film, she believes, grounds Edna’s deteriorat­ing state – even in its eventual monstrous externalis­ation – in the real, lived troughs of human horrors.

“The film talks specifical­ly about Alzheimer’s, but it also applies to anyone who is experienci­ng loss in all its forms – in having to parent their own parents, or seeing their decline,” James explains. “It’s a really emotionall­y fraught situation because there’s often the sense of the grandparen­ts needing help, but being unwilling to ask for it as well.”

These taut familial dynamics are

at the heart of the narrative. “There’s a sense of simmering resentment­s between the three [women]: the idea of one family member’s expectatio­ns, another’s guilt and a judment of inaction.”

Having premiered the film at the Sundance film festival to glowing reviews – Variety called it “impressive­ly scarifying” – Relic also drew comparison­s to Jennifer Kent’s The Babadook and Ari Aster’s Hereditary: all inwardlook­ing female-led arthouse horror films encased in a domestic setting. Both films, which also premiered at Sundance, have since launched the careers of their directors; whether or not Relic will do the same is yet to be seen (IFC Midnight has acquired the film for US distributi­on).

James is already in the early developmen­t stages for her next feature, inspired by her short film Drum Wave – a folk horror centred on a young pianist who must confront her fear of motherhood when she marries into a remote island community.

The trend towards both critically and commercial­ly successful midbudget “smart horror” – films including Get Out, A Quiet Place and The Witch

– has presented a new opportunit­y for her as a film-maker.

“It’s a really exciting time because audiences are more receptive to the idea that horror can be the perfect space to talk about social or deep, emotional issues in an accessible way,” she says. “I think we’re seeing an influx of films stand up on their artistic integrity, as well as being these thrilling genre rides.

“The meeting point between the two is my favourite type of film – and certainly the films I want to continue making.”

• Relic premieres in Australia on Stan, and in US cinemas, on Friday 10 July

 ??  ?? ‘I was watching way too much Asian horror’: Natalie Erika James on the set of Relic, which premieres on Stan on 10 July. Photograph: Stan
‘I was watching way too much Asian horror’: Natalie Erika James on the set of Relic, which premieres on Stan on 10 July. Photograph: Stan
 ??  ?? Robyn Nevin in Relic. Director Natalie Erika James says the film ‘talks specifical­ly about Alzheimer’s, but it also applies to anyone who is experienci­ng loss in all its forms’. Photograph: Jackson Finter/Stan
Robyn Nevin in Relic. Director Natalie Erika James says the film ‘talks specifical­ly about Alzheimer’s, but it also applies to anyone who is experienci­ng loss in all its forms’. Photograph: Jackson Finter/Stan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States